Efforts continue to recover bodies after wall collapse
Efforts to recover the three remaining bodies of five foreign workers crushedto death in a wall collapse at a metal recycling plant will resume today.
The bodies of two of those killed in the accident were recovered on Thursday night after work by emergency crews to retrieve them from underneath tons of metal and concrete rubble.
All five workers were pronounced dead at the scene following the incident atHawkeswood Metal Recycling in the Nechells area of Birmingham at about 8.40am on Thursday.
The dead are all originally from Gambia, and some are believed to be Spanish nationals, who were working when a 15ft (4.5m) concrete bay wall collapsed on them.
Saibo Sillah, 42, Ousman Jabbie, Mohammed Jangana, Alimano Jammeh and Bangaly Dukureh were all married and with children, according to the city's Gambian Association.
Blocks weighing about one-and-a-half tons each came down, along with tons of scrap metal being stored in an outside yard.
All the men were married with young families; Mr Saillah had three-year-oldtwins, and Mr Jangana had a baby.
Friends of Mr Jammeh also revealed his wife and children were due to arrive in the UK on Sunday and had not yet been told of the tragedy.
Members of the community said they were hard workers on minimum wage who had been employed through a recruitment agency.
Prayers have been said at local mosques while the president of the city's Gambian Association based in Ladywood said the community had been left"devastated".
Ansumana Barrow, 63, who works in Brierley Hill, West Midlands, said theassociation would be meeting to make sure the bereaved families get whatever help they need.
A sixth man injured in the accident is currently in hospital after suffering aleg injury, although it is not thought to be life-threatening.
Friends of the wounded man said he rang them from hospital with news of the deaths.
Detective Superintendent Mark Payne, of West Midlands Police, said a joint Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and police investigation was being carried out to establish the cause but warned the process could take weeks.
Mr Payne said:
"We're simply trying to recover the bodies of the men and do it in a way which will help understand exactly how that wall came to fall down.
"Clearly we are investigating together with the HSE, whether there are any issues of negligence or malpractice that have contributed to that wall falling down."
Emergency services have accounted for all staff on site and said there was no prospect of any survivors under the rubble.
Mr Payne said:"It appears that that wall has collapsed on top of the men and then the scrap metal behind the wall has fallen on top."
West Midlands Fire Service assistant chief fire officer Gary Taylor said thepriority was to ensure bodies were recovered "in the most timely and safe way possible, and with the utmost dignity and respect".